Current projects, case studies and data
Civil Society projects
Across multiple teams at the GLA we are working as part of the Building Strong Communities mission to strengthen London's Civil Society.
Read more about some of our projects:
Co-designed and co-created with Londoners, the London Civic Strength Index was developed by The Young Foundation and funded by the GLA and maps the key domains of community strength and identify priorities for the recovery process.
The Civic Futures programme is a fellowship programme to bring leaders across London’s civil society and local government to facilitate collective learning and discovery focused on collaboration, exploration and inquiry and systems thinking to support London’s recovery.
The Civil Society Roots Incubator programme supports community-led partnerships and collaborations that raise the voices of Londoners, increase feelings of belonging and increase access to support and services.
In response to the COVID-19 crisis London’s funders have been working together to provide a coordinated funding to support groups responding to the needs of the capital's communities.
Applications to the fund are currently closed, but you can find out more about the final London Community Response learning reports on equity, scenario-planning, processes and delivering differently.
The Community Spaces at Risk fund provides one-to-one specialist advice, direct support and small to medium grants to protect community-led spaces that are critical to the health, wellbeing and resilience of Londoners.
The London Community Response Survey dataset includes ongoing questionnaires sent to a cohort of frontline Civil Society Organisation, beginning in April 2020. The results continue to inform the pan-London response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
We work to encourage growth in London's town centres and put communities at the heart of transformation.
Funds which have supported this work include:
- Good Growth Fund
- Crowdfund London
- Development Support Fund
'Social Prescribing', where patients are supported to use and sign-posted to local, non-clinical services, is a commitment of the Mayor's Health Inequalities Strategy.
Thrive LDN is a citywide movement to improve mental health and wellbeing. You can find more information about the campaign on the Thrive LDN website.
We've been investing in community sport to help change lives, build stronger communities and improve the health and wellbeing of Londoners.
City Hall's Team London offer a range of programmes to help build capacity within Civil Society, including volunteering, training and advice.
Need volunteers?
If you are interested in recruiting volunteers for your charity or project, Team London can help. We help over 2,500 charities find the right people.
The Team London website can help you find volunteers from a community of more than 150,000 volunteers.
Wanting to Skill-Up?
Discover the funding and training opportunities available to small charities, social enterprises and schools.
We've been working to protect cultural venues and infrastructure.
My London Borough of Culture Award is seeking innovative partnerships between boroughs and civil society organisations.
Good practice case studies
We want to celebrate the work and value of London's Civil Society.
Below are good practice case studies from Civil Society organisations across London.
Working together to achieve change - Emma Harrison, Director of IMiX and Satbir Singh, CEO of JCWI
Many Windrush people have, since around 2012, been targeted by the Home Office’s ‘hostile environment’ policy – stopping them from working, renting property, or accessing benefits and services, and in some cases meaning they have been detained or deported – as they didn’t have adequate paperwork to prove their right to live in the UK. Many turned to charities for help.
As a coalition of charities working across race equality and refugee and migrants’ rights, we came together to work out how we could make a difference to the members of the Windrush generation. We wanted to secure their status as British citizens while shining a light on the pernicious and harmful effects of the hostile environment more broadly and its impact on other people who choose to make the UK their home.
To make this campaign successful we knew we’d need the backing of journalists, politicians and the public, and crucially the community itself.
The biggest challenge – and the most rewarding one – was supporting people to step up and talk about their experiences. Colleagues invested a lot of time in meeting people, hearing their stories and then guiding them through the process of media interviews. Critically, we spent time talking to the journalists to ensure they understood what was at stake each time someone spoke out.
From Paulette Wilson, who worked in the House of Commons and was then held in detention, to Albert Thompson, who was being refused lifesaving cancer treatment; the members of the Windrush Generation were the real heroes of this campaign. They showed bravery and courage in telling their stories.
Those people and their stories unlocked the support of the Guardian and Channel 4 News, which in turn generated more coverage from across the media spectrum, leading to 77 front page stories and 20 per cent of the population saying they’d read about Windrush.
With campaigning, timing is everything. We worked with the High Commissioners from Caribbean countries to exert political pressure during the Commonwealth Summit (CHOGM 2018). The government’s initial refusal to engage with the High Commissioners on the Windrush scandal generated significant media coverage and provided a platform for MPs at Westminster to challenge government policy.
In addition to the political and media activity, we commissioned polling to guide messaging and demonstrate public opposition to the treatment of the Windrush generation. We amplified a widely shared petition started by an affected person and invested time in social media to keep the debate going.
The resulting media coverage and political debate dominated the UK news agenda for weeks, even at a time when the UK was taking military action abroad, leading to people from the Windrush generation receiving an apology from government and a process to confirm their status, transforming hundreds of people’s lives.
We learned so much during the campaign and there are so many things we would have done differently:
- Agreeing a hashtag would have been beneficial for our social media work.
- Involving more groups at an early stage would have helped us reach more politicians, journalists and supporters.
- Involving the community more - with them not for them is such an important mantra.
- Be ready with “what next” as we achieved our campaign aim (relatively) quickly meaning we didn’t have our plan for dismantling the hostile environment ready.
- Our biggest lesson was in working together. Coalition working is hard, but worth the investment. It is all about relationships; honesty, openness and clarity in roles and responsibilities. Leave your ego at the door and don’t worry about the organisational brand. Say thank you often and give your colleagues a lift when the going gets tough.
- Finally, celebrate more! Success is hard to come by, when you win, shout it from the rooftops.
Core coalition IMiX, JCWI , Runnymede Trust, Praxis Community Projects and Refugee and Migrant Centre
Building data and digital skills in small charities and community groups - Kate White, Superhighways Manager
Superhighways is a small friendly team of five with a passion for helping local communities make best use of technology for social impact. We have been helping hundreds of small local charities and community groups in south London to do more with digital for 20 years.
Our current City Bridge Trust funded Impact Aloud project focuses on supporting organisations across 10 south London boroughs to use digital tools to better capture and communicate their impact. Experiences from this work, alongside the Data Evolution project’s Data Maturity Framework for the Social Sector and The Way Ahead’s Data Sharing for Civil Society (co-chaired by us), has increasingly led to a recognition that data literacy and digital skills go hand in hand, together enabling groups to better evidence need, measure impact and influence local policy.
Data learning events
As a result we’ve recently been testing ways to reach out to small local charities and community groups to get them interested in, and gain a better understanding of, the potential of data.
Following the success of a data event in Kingston, we set about partnering with Croydon Voluntary Action to co-ordinate a data learning event - this time for Croydon groups.
We tweaked the format - squeezing a packed agenda into a morning session - mindful of the capacity of smaller organisations to step away from service delivery.
We approached the GLA and London Plus, both with new Civil Society Data Officer and Data and Intelligence Co-ordinators posts, to enlist their help, and met to collaborate on creating a data resource to give out on the day and discuss some scenario based exercises in relation to the London Data Store.
In addition, we contacted the Croydon Data Observatory and a local Data Scientist in order to utilise local and London wide assets.
On the day
Representatives from 15 small charities and community organisations attended the event and after a little scene setting, we kicked off with some data capture of our own, to get a feel for where organisations in the room were with their use of data.
Small group peer sharing
Then it was time to hear from some Croydon based organisations we’d been in touch with to talk about their data journeys. They shared key tools used for data collection and the challenges around data and partnership projects. They also shared an example of how analysing data had led them to identify a gap in service provision. As a result, they developed targeted services to reach people in this part of the borough. It was heartening to hear one group explain how a new job role with an Information and Communications remit had recently been created, building in-house capacity to do more with data.
Show and tell
We then took to the floor to give a demonstration of some free mapping data tools including Batch Geo, Google My Maps, My Society’s MapIt, London Data Store’s Borough / Ward Mapping Template and Power BI. The aim was to showcase a range of tools available to everyone, and by doing a live demonstration, also reassure the attendees that they are genuinely simply to use. We gave out the co-designed take away resource featuring useful tools and data sources and offered follow up support under our funded Impact Aloud project - an obvious bonus.
Local Croydon Data
We then had a great demo from a member of the Croydon Data Observatory team – a self confessed data geek with a genuine interest in supporting communities utilise available data and happy to share his email for future queries or support required!
London Data Store
The GLA and London Plus data officers were up next as a double act, introducing the audience to the wealth of information held with the GLA’s London Data Store. They walked through a really useful example looking at borough profiles and focussing on data about social isolation – a key issue that Croydon’s voluntary and community sector address. It was also an opportunity to promote the GLA’s civil society data office hours and bursary tickets sponsored by London Plus to the first UK Data4Good conference.
Introducing Open Data
Everyone is interested in who is funding who – so we used this slot to showcase the 360Giving data set containing grants data from a range of funders publishing to an open standard. A local Data Scientist very generously used this data alongside other open data from the Charity Commission to draw together a picture of the funding make up in Croydon.
Results
The event was a great success and from our point of view worked well as an introductory step for these small local groups into the world of data.
We will be following up with groups to find out what they did as a result - capturing success stories as well as any barriers faced when attempting to implement the learning.
Croydon Voluntary Action's Head of Community Involvement said 'As the local voluntary sector umbrella organisation, CVA is really passionate about community groups and their amazing work in Croydon. In today's digital world, data analysis has become more and more crucial in understanding/visualising communities strengths and needs and showcasing the profound impact of the works of our charities. The event offered to groups provided just that: knowledge, tips and inspirations for an easier and effective use of data through accessible inexpensive tools, opening up the doors to commissioning, attracting future funding, partnership and impact'.
See our online round up of the event for further information including all resources referred to in this blog.
Key learnings
- Peer sharing always goes down well! Small groups talking about their own experiences can inspire and encourage others to follow their lead.
- Collaboration is key – working with others meant we could leverage additional expertise and build relationships for future joint working or support.
- Make it local – utilising local assets and focussing on scenarios that are relevant to a particular borough will widen impact.
- Maximise learning for attendees – creating a resource as a tangible take away takes time but will pay off as can be tweaked and re-used time and again.
- Use events as a way of capturing data yourself whilst you have a captive audience! Online interactive tools are a great way to get input from attendees – in this instance benchmarking data maturity and flagging challenges faced.
- Check and double check wifi! Be flexible to roll with it if connections go down!
Kate White, Superhighways Manager
[email protected]
Data for Civil Society organisations
The London DataStore is a free and open data-sharing portal where anyone can access data relating to the capital.
Whether you’re a citizen, charity, business owner, researcher or developer, the site provides more than 700 datasets to help you understand the city and develop solutions to its problems.
Please email us any question or query about London's data to [email protected] and we will respond, signpost and support you to find what you need.
We've put together a document with useful datasets which are open and can be accessed by all.
The Mayor’s Office for Policing And Crime (MOPAC) publishes data and statistics on a range of policing and crime indicators.
At London Tech Week in June 2017, the Mayor set out an ambition for London to become the smartest city in the world. He has asked London’s new Chief Digital Officer and the Smart London Board to secure London’s position at the forefront of innovation in smart cities and what is known as advanced urban services.
Together they are starting a Listening Exercise for a new Smart London Plan. This will result in measures for a future, inclusive London in line with mayoral strategies and the London Plan.
The Mayor wants to see the benefits of new technology and digital opportunities shared by all Londoners.
This includes addressing digital connectivity, ensuring young people get the right skills to fill a growing number of digital, creative and technology jobs, convening tech entrepreneurs and industry-leading investors through TeachInvest and much more.
Get in touch
If you would like further information or to contact the team, please email [email protected].
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